It’s #3 that most interests me – and not just when it comes to the blog here at edgital, or museum thinkers and their personal/professional blogs (as the panel explored, blogs bridge both worlds). I’m wondering how often institutions consider this question when dealing with their official blogs.

When we started edgital, I began reading about social media strategy. I had never thought of blogs as social media, which perhaps was ignorant of me (honestly this whole foray into museum education and digital media has been one long exercise in getting in touch with my own ignorance!). Social media to me meant Facebook, twitter, pinterest – that is, social networking sites. But every book and article I’ve read so far about creating a presence on social media, whether it be in regards to for-profit business, general public relations or non-profit organizations, starts with a blog and works out from there. The second thing all these sources discuss is how you increase the social capital of your blog – which involves making sure that they really are as social as they can be.

OK, I thought – if this is what you’re supposed to do, then I shall do it. But I quickly discovered how much time it takes: to read all the other blogs and comment thoughtfully, which usually means tracking each conversation across at least a day and often across a few days so that you can continue to contribute (my having time to do this lasted approximately 2 weeks). Then you have to consider and write posts in response to other blogs and comments to your own blog – which means giving up a measure of control. This sequence of events is tricky enough for an individual. For a museum where institutional identity is tied up in the blog’s voice, and running a blog is probably one of several duties for the organizer, the whole thing can become constrained and time prohibitive.

But there the question sits – how well do we play with others? Or, put another way, how social are our blogs, which ought to be the centerpiece of our social media strategies? Hundreds of museums are running blogs, and we are running them for many of the same reasons that businesses run theirs – to communicate with and build community, to be open and responsive to our audience, to provide the best service in what we do to the people who care about us and what we produce. But how many of us are actively looking for ways to make the museum blogosphere a community of conversation? How often do we look for and amplify the voices of other people, rather than just the voice of our museum?

At my institution, blog posts are written from across the organization and sent to an editor. This is the general pattern for all of our social media. How responsive and part of larger conversations our blog, or Facebook, or twitter posts are is pretty much up to each individual author. That puts the onus on us to incorporate links to other people’s thoughts into our social media contributions. But we’re not used to that. At least not at the pace at which the web works. Museums are more in the habit of being content-producers, book and ephemera publishers. We put it up on exhibition, write it and print it, audiences come look at it and read it. I fear we as a field may be handling our social media in much the same way, and that’s sort of missing the whole point of social media.

Museum educators, of course, spend much time facilitating face-to-face conversations around the content our institutions produce. It is our primary job responsibility, carried out in Q&As at the end of lectures, during school tours and workshops for the general public and teachers. But are we applying that expertise to the social media realm? A quote tweeted by Sarah Hromack from the MCN panel remarked “We are terrified of being wrong in public.” Does the public nature of blogs affect our willingness to amplify other voices? Do we fear associating with the “wrong crowd” (and who would that be anyway)?

Do you read blogs? Write one? Which blogs really get you thinking? Have you ever read a post that sparked the kind of great conversation we strive for on the gallery floor? What was it?

I turned up some great papers on blogs while researching this post, and thought I would share for anyone interested…

6 thoughts on “Is Your Museum’s Blog Social?”

An interesting model I’m looking forward to seeing is the ROM’s new site, which, according to Janet Carding, is going to democratize access to outreach for all staff. Everybody will be able to blog, without moderation, and without having an editor vet it. And being the kind of inspiring leader she is, Janet admitted in public that she’d have to start blogging herself if she was going to expect her staff to do it. I’ll be very interested to see what happens to the fears about losing the impersonal voice when a museum of ROM’s size has multiple bloggers, all using their own voices.

Hi Ed! Thanks for commenting and drawing attention to the ROM and their blog – I’ll look forward to seeing how that goes. They do such great work over there. I’ve been following their twitter feeds – both the main one and ROMKids, which I think are among the best from an educational point of view. At my museum we’ve been very encouraged to speak in our own voices on social media and that direction has proven so successful that it seems to be gaining even more momentum recently. After publishing this post I started to think that I really should have asked the question – SHOULD institutional blogs be social in the way I’m talking about? What’s the potential value in that for museums – because it’s obviously going to be somewhat different than it is for a for-profit business? The Walker’s website has certainly gotten a lot of attention and bears watching because it’s doing a lot of what I’m talking about – amplifying arts news from other sources. I need to take a closer look at their blogs to see if they have the deeply interlinked nature of the regular blogosphere. Chances are, eventually, someone’s just going to have to try it and see if it’s better or worse than the more or less broadcast model most institutional blogs use now. Maybe if we all get more comfortable with the nature of writing for blogs, it will happen naturally.

Hi Erin, very interesting post! I think institutional blogs absolutely should be social in the way you’re talking about. The thing I wonder about is how accessible many institutional blogs are to their audiences? How many museum visitors follow museum blogs, especially if the blogs are attached strictly to the museum website?

I know it’s a fairly new and still relatively small platform, but my favorite museum blogs are the ones I follow on tumblr. The ROMKids tumblr is delightful and sfmoma has been very successful with theirs. Their post are typically short, fun, and casual which makes me more inclined to interact.

I think the way to get away from the broadcast model you mentioned is to blog via social platforms that – whether they be wordpress, blogger, tumblr, whatever – allow for easy interaction and, most importantly, sharing.

Hi Lindsey – great points! At my institution we are always hungry for comments and interaction, but we tend to get a lot more via our Facebook and twitter feeds than our blog, which, as you say, is hosted on our website. I’ll have to ask to find out how many followers we have – we offer subscription via RSS feed, and several share options on each post. From the advice I’ve read from social media gurus, it’s advisable to offer many subscription options. I personally like RSS feed the least unless it can send the feed to my Google Reader (because not all blogs offer the same options I can’t get all the blogs I follow to show up in one place, much as I wish they would), and many people seem to prefer email subscription. Thanks for the recs on good tumblr channels – I just looked at ROMKids tumblr and it does look really interesting! It’s so easy to get scattered with social media and try to maintain channels on every major platform but the other advice I often read is to concentrate your efforts. Choose a couple of platforms and make sure those are fulfilling your goals, with each performing a unique function so that you’re not wasting time and energy or repeating your efforts.

I recognize I’m a bit late to this party (sorry!), but I just wanted to thank you for your kind words about ROMKids. All the online we’ve done over the last few years is just a small part of my job, but one I really enjoy.

I think a lot about blogging, and really social media in general, is just showing the public how you enjoy doing what you do. Whether it’s buying plaster for a weekend program, training staff for camp, or talking about some new discovery, showing people the process and your enjoyment through it really connects them to the final product.

About Edgital

edgital is a collaborative project with the goal of supporting dialogue and creative thinking at the edge of museum education and digital media technology. We explore a set of fundamental concerns around interpretation, experience, visitor engagement, and the broader social role of museums.